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Monday, September 24, 2007

Ten Most Asked Questions

Here you go: The most commonly asked insurance questions in the history of asking insurance questions:1.Q: Can someone get a life insurance policy on me without my knowledge?A: Anything under the sun is possible. In order to get a life insurance policy issued, a person should have:1. An insurable interest in the insured (you’re financially impacted if someone dies)2. A need for the insurance $$ amount requested (no $5 million polices on your kids, unless she’s Miley Cyrus)3. Access to personal information IE DOB, SSN, address, medical history4. Signature of the insured (if insured is an adult)5. Cooperation from insured if insurer requires paramedic exam (blood, urine, saliva, med history) or a physical exam. The people performing the exams are required to check IDs.In order to collect on the policy, the person would need:1. Cooperation from family or the executor of the estate to get death certificates.2. Be outside the contestability period of the policy (usually two years from policy issue date) to avoid the scrutiny of the insurance company.In the US, there are around 1,500 - 2,000 life insurance companies and they all do business in a similar manner with small differences in underwriting. None of them would make a profit by paying death claims on fraudulently obtained policies; so safeguards are put in place to guard against deception.Without a paramedic exam or physical, there is a limit on how much insurance you can purchase. The industry limit seems to be around $250,000. So purchasing a $1M life insurance policy without the insured’s knowledge would be a challenge requiring a good amount of deception and fraud at policy issue.This limits the size and type of policy someone could purchase. Small policies (say less than $100,000 for a young person, $25,000 for an older person) get less scrutiny. Group policies require only a few questions, but again limit the death benefit that can be purchased (usually only spouses can be named to purchase 50% of employee’s death benefit).So, my conclusion; unless you’re the target of a well thought out deception, you’re probably just paranoid or watch too much TV.2.Q: My ______ (fill in the blank) died and we can’t find their life insurance policies. Where can I find this information?A: There is not a central database of life insurance policies. I’ve written an article on searching for missing life policies: http://www.insuranceyak.com/2007/09/20/find-a-lost-life-insurance-policy/ Sorry for your loss and good luck with your search.3.Q: I need to file a claim against someone else’s policy. How do I find out who their insurer is?A: A person or business’s insurance coverage is private information, so you can’t and you don’t. Their insurer will not accept claims from you and in most cases will not even speak with you. If the other party refuses to file a claim or admit fault, you’ll need to involve your insurance company or take legal action. In the case of any legal action, I would recommend involving a lawyer.Keep in mind your insurance covers you, their insurance covers them. If you have bodily injury or property damage and someone else is the proximate cause, you could file a claim with your insurance company and allow your insurer to subrogate the claim against their insurance company.4.Q: What’s it like to work for _____(fill in the blank)? Is their training good? Will I really make $100K in my first year selling insurance?A: There are a number of insurance companies who are always hiring sales agents, “account managers” or (my favorite) “manager trainees” : Farmers, Met Life, State Farm, Allstate, Primerica, New York Life, United American. The list goes on. There's a reason why they’re always hiring: They wash out 85-95% of all their new agents within two years, 98-99% after 5 years. These are SALES jobs; you sell you eat, don’t sell don’t eat. Some will pay you a stipend or advance your commission if you’re not selling, but the bottom line is you have to sell, week in, week out or your butt is out in the street. Now there always seems to be 1 out of 100 people who thrives is sales; kid natural who makes $100K her first year. If you’re one of these people, God has blessed you; may he continue to do so. Most other successful sales people just work hard and persevere long enough until they succeed. Average income for a first year sales agent? 30K if you work really hard and get a little lucky.My advice: if you’re really interested in the industry, get a job working for a successful agent with a good reputation in the business and learn the ropes. When you’re ready, look for a good situation working for yourself selling what you like to sell.See http://ohio-insurance-forum.blogspot.com/2007/06/q-how-does-insurance-agent-earn.html for a rundown on commissions earned and learn how big you’ll have to be in order to survive the business.5Q: A big expensive repair need to be done to my house, will my homeowners insurance cover it?A: Homeowners insurance covers unexpected occurrences. Policies and coverage vary by state and policy, but repairs to a house are usually not covered unless the damage was caused by a covered risk.Typically excluded items: earth movement, settling, faulty material, faulty workmanship, tree roots, old age & wear and tear, insect, vermin and pet damage.So unless the proximate cause was something covered: fire, wind, falling objects, vehicle damage, building collapse, broken pipes you have no coverage. Water backup is an endorsement that usually has to be added to a policy; don’t have it, no coverage. If you call the insurance company claims center, they will log your call and start the count on number of claims you’ve filed in the past 5 years. Chances are 2 claims in three years will trigger a cancelation even if 0 dollars are paid on one claim. So you may want to hypothetically discuss this claim with YOUR AGENT.See more about Homeowners coverage at:http://ohio-insurance-forum.blogspot.com/2007/07/homeowners-insurance-covered-or-not.html

1 comment:

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